Analyzing political cartoons.

It is time to practice analyzing political cartoons. Complete the following steps for your assignment:
1. Visit Five Decades of Herblock (https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/herblock/5decades.htm ) on The Washington Post web site.
2. Under Herblock’s Essays, select 1956—1965, and then select 1966—1975. For both selections, read the essays and view the political cartoons associated with each decade. The cartoons are linked throughout each essay. Select each link in the essays to view and analyze the cartoons:
o Determine the issue of the respective historical moments that each of these cartoons critiques.
o Note which visual elements (the actual drawing, including the layout and design) and verbal elements (the text, including titles and captions) are combined to produce particular meanings and effects in each cartoon.
3. Select any five political cartoons from the Herblock collection. For each of the political cartoons you choose, write a paragraph analysis that does the following:
o Identifies the vice, issue, or institution that the cartoon satirizes.
o Analyzes the visual and verbal elements that combine to produce meaning and effect.
o Identifies the elements of satire the creator uses. Refer to the list of elements above and those listed in the slideshow.
o Evaluates the effectiveness of the satire. Are the cartoonist’s techniques effective? Why or why not?

 

Sample Solution

4. A pressing need for the standardisation of assessment in the classroom, both summative and formative.
De-centralised Education Systems and trends in pedagogy
In de-centralised education systems, and in developed economies, we are seeing a continuing move towards enquiry-based learning and the notion of self-aware students and self-aware practitioners. This refers to the emphasis on teaching students how they learn, and how to plan and organise their own learning (a good example is the work of the highly influential educator John Hattie and his Visible Learning programme which is being increasingly adopted worldwide).
This means that future technology will need to support students who are developing their own portfolio of skills and competencies, and who will be learning through projects that encompass a range of subjects. We are also seeing a shift towards Blended Learning, combining experiential education with technology, so that the latter becomes one tool among many, and to ensure that physical experience (making things, doing experiments with laboratory equipment) and social interaction continues to be the core focus of classrooms.
De-centralised education systems tend to encourage pockets of excellence and innovative practice. In reality these can end up being isolated, even within schools where one or more ‘super teachers’ experiment with new technologies and pedagogies and the rest of the staff carry on as before. Over the next three to five years, Change Management and teacher training and support will continue to be a priority to ensure that all staff are brought to the same level. Online teacher communities and support networks (e.g. Edmodo) are and will be a vital part of this.
From a technology perspective the rise of mobile devices and apps has led to a rapid shift away from large one-program-does-everything model towards Playlist Learning and Teaching. With this approach, students and teachers are building and using their own highly personalised collection of apps to learn and teach both inside and outside the classroom. In the short term this has led to a huge demand for curated libraries of content. Long term this shift allows for the development of Diamond Age Primers – artificial intelligences that work with a student or teacher to build a flexible curriculum for learning in response to the interests, intellectual development, skills and needs of the individual.
One student-one device teaching is currently problematic and, without standardisation, wi

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